Taiwan authorities renew call for calm after taking over failing bank (Update 2)
January 8, 2007 (AFP)
Taiwan authorities renewed a call for calm among depositors after the government took over a bank faced with a run on funds and insisted there was no risk to the financial system as a whole.
"The government guarantees that the rights and benefits of all of the bank's depositors will be fully protected in a timely and appropriate manner after the government takeover. There is no need for depositors to worry," Finance Minister Ho Chih-chin told reporters.
The government took over The Chinese Bank on Saturday following panic runs all over the island after two financially-stricken units of the Rebar group announced Friday they had filed bankruptcy reorganisation applications with the Taipei District Court.
"I have faith in Taiwan's financial system which is sound enough to take on the bank's difficulties. It is unlikely for Taiwan to suffer a systematic financial crisis," Ho said.
AntiSpin: Interesting because just last Friday I was getting lectured by a bank regulator in the UK that our warnings to readers about risks in the banking sector are unwarranted and alarmist: "The era of bank failures and bank runs in is over."
Taiwan is known for its corrupt banks, and this bank failure appears to be a result of corruption. China is also known for less than de-lux banking practices, and that fact makes this event more interesting. There have been a number of warnings recently about risks in the Chinese banking system, that the government press makes no effort to hide. If a bank were to fail in China, likely the Chinese government will not be asking citizens to stop withdrawing money as in Taiwan. Presumably under similar circumstances they will tell bank customers to stop withdrawing money. Or else. Then again, maybe no one will know about it until well after the fact.
Whether China's banks are more or less corrupt than Taiwan's is a matter of debate. The relationship between the level of corruption in the public sector that regulates banking and a nation's banking system itself is strong. In the public sector in Asia, Transparency International rates Taiwan just below Japan but well above China and South Korea in corruption perception.
We'll soon find out if this bank failure is an isolated event in Taiwan or has more broad implications in Asia.
January 8, 2007 (AFP)
Taiwan authorities renewed a call for calm among depositors after the government took over a bank faced with a run on funds and insisted there was no risk to the financial system as a whole.
"The government guarantees that the rights and benefits of all of the bank's depositors will be fully protected in a timely and appropriate manner after the government takeover. There is no need for depositors to worry," Finance Minister Ho Chih-chin told reporters.
The government took over The Chinese Bank on Saturday following panic runs all over the island after two financially-stricken units of the Rebar group announced Friday they had filed bankruptcy reorganisation applications with the Taipei District Court.
"I have faith in Taiwan's financial system which is sound enough to take on the bank's difficulties. It is unlikely for Taiwan to suffer a systematic financial crisis," Ho said.
AntiSpin: Interesting because just last Friday I was getting lectured by a bank regulator in the UK that our warnings to readers about risks in the banking sector are unwarranted and alarmist: "The era of bank failures and bank runs in is over."
Taiwan is known for its corrupt banks, and this bank failure appears to be a result of corruption. China is also known for less than de-lux banking practices, and that fact makes this event more interesting. There have been a number of warnings recently about risks in the Chinese banking system, that the government press makes no effort to hide. If a bank were to fail in China, likely the Chinese government will not be asking citizens to stop withdrawing money as in Taiwan. Presumably under similar circumstances they will tell bank customers to stop withdrawing money. Or else. Then again, maybe no one will know about it until well after the fact.
Whether China's banks are more or less corrupt than Taiwan's is a matter of debate. The relationship between the level of corruption in the public sector that regulates banking and a nation's banking system itself is strong. In the public sector in Asia, Transparency International rates Taiwan just below Japan but well above China and South Korea in corruption perception.
Rank | Nation | Score (higher means perceived to be less corrupt) | No. of surveys used |
5 | Singapore | 9.4 | 12 |
14 (tie) | Hong Kong | 8.0 | 11 |
21 (tie) | Japan | 7.0 | 13 |
30 (tie) | Taiwan | 5.7 | 13 |
37 (tie) | Malaysia | 5.2 | 13 |
50 (tie) | South Korea | 4.3 | 12 |
66 (tie) | China | 3.4 | 13 |
We'll soon find out if this bank failure is an isolated event in Taiwan or has more broad implications in Asia.
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